Dead attackers: Bars and restaurants

Abaaoud, who is believed to have lived in the Molenbeek district of Brussels, was identified as the suspected commander of the Paris attacks. Paris Prosecutors say he returned to the Bataclan club, scene of the most deadly of the Paris attacks, in the hours after the shootings.

He is believed to have been one of the Islamic State (ISIL) group’s most active operators, a source close to the French investigation said on Monday.

“He appears to be the brains behind several planned attacks in Europe,” the source told Reuters.

He was killed during a police raid in Saint-Denis, northern Paris, on November 18, French authorities confirmed.

He was thought to be close to ISIL leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi.

French aircraft targeted Abaaoud in Syria last month.

He was also named by media last year as the brother of a 13-year-old boy who left Belgium to become a fighter in Syria.

Dead attackers: Bataclan

Mohamed-Aggad went to Syria with a group of other young people at the end of 2013, a judicial source and other officials said. Other members of the group that went to Syria were arrested and imprisoned in May 2014 after their return, according to the judicial source and other sources close to the situation. Mohammed-Aggad’s older brother Karim, who also visited Syria, is in jail in France, the judicial source said.

Omar Ismail MostefaiAge: 29Nationality: French Born: 21 November 1985, Courcouronnes, south of ParisDied: 13 November 2015

Mostefai was born and grew up in the poor Paris suburb of Courcouronnes. His family is of Algerian origin.

In his late teens, he became known to police as a petty criminal, getting several convictions between 2004 and 2010, but serving no jail time.

French intelligence services have had a file on him since at least 2010, when he was first flagged as having been radicalised, according to the Paris prosecutor’s office.

There are reports that Mostefai travelled to Syria in recent years.

Meanwhile, a Turkish government official claimed that Turkey contacted France about Mostefai in December 2014 and June 2015, but they only received a request for information on him from French authorities after the attacks.

The picture of the third Stade de France attacker matches that of a man travelling under the name of M al-Mahmod, according to media reports.

The BBC matched the picture of a suicide bomber wanted by police in connection with the Stade de France bombings with a photo on the arrival papers of a man travelling as M al-Mahmod, who came to the Greek island of Leros on October 3.